The weird
origins of the two characters have been covered on this blog here and here so I will briefly mention that a strip with the title of SHIVER AND SHAKE first
appeared in COR!! comic where it showed adventures of a spook named Shake and an
undead cavalier named Shiver. The COR!! strip was discontinued in February 1973
but when Shiver and Shake comic came
out a month later, the spook made a comeback renamed as Shiver (after his companion
in the COR!! strip) while his previous name was given to his new pal – the
elephant dressed in what looked like school uniform.
Drawn by
Mike Lacey, the pair appeared regularly on the front cover of SHIVER AND SHAKE
and hosted their respective sections inside the paper. Initially the front
covers were split along the middle with Shiver appearing on the left and Shake
on the right, presumably to emphasise the rivalry of the two sections (let us
not forget that the comic was imitating its sister publication Whizzer and Chips that pioneered and
successfully exploited the two-comics-in-one gimmick). Later in the run the
split cover format was dropped in favour of a single large illustration showing
the antics of both characters. Here are some examples of split covers, followed
by a couple of nice samples of the later trend:
A small number of covers were sort of split in half but actually consisted of two panels with the two characters appearing in both:
Front cover
domination of the spook and tusker pair lasted for fifty-two weekly issues
(exactly one year) until No. 53 when they were ousted and permanently replaced by
Frankie
Stein. That said, the star characters retained their position on the
front covers of all Holiday Specials and Annuals that carried their name
(except 1974 Holiday Special and 1976 Annual when they stepped down for Frankie
Stein).
The two
cover stars hosted their own sections inside the paper. In practice this meant
that they appeared on the pages of their respective reader participation
features urging readers to send their contributions in exchange for cash
prizes. The images and messages were always the same:
Besides, on
a few occasions Shiver and Shake featured in promotional messages urging
readers to place their regular orders:
In issue 41
they can be seen side-by-side in this competition announcement:
Readers
could also follow weekly adventures of both cover stars: Shiver was one of the main characters in The Duke’s Spook illustrated by
Arthur Martin, whereas Shake had the prime slot on the cover of his own section, illustrated by Mike Lacey. Both features will receive dedicated posts
when their turn comes but in the meantime, here are examples of both
strips:
The spook
and the elephant had a full page each but Shake had the luxury of full
colour presentation. This doesn’t mean that the tusker enjoyed preferential
treatment because the spook had the advantage of starring in yet another weekly strip - the Shiver Givers, so actually the paper had more of Shiver than of Shake. Again, The
Shiver Givers will be covered separately in due course, but here is a taste:
On a number
of occasions both characters crossed over in other strips inside the paper,
such as Match of the Week in issues No 6 and 20:
… The
Shiver Givers in issues 37 and 45:
… and Wizards
Anonymous in issue 27. Here are both pages of this interesting episode,
illustrated by Brian Walker:
Of the two "types" of covers, I prefer the large panel ones - that one with the wallpaper's brilliant!
ReplyDeleteAnd Brian Walker can do a nice Lolly Pop, it seems.